The yellow and black Corvette had led the GTE category since the safety car period in the first hour of the race. Nearly 16 hours later, contact with a Porsche resulted in
extensive damage to the front and rear of the car and a loss of drive. Driver Jan Magnussen was unharmed, but the car could not return to the pit lane and was retired.

"I was coming out of the Porsche Curves behind a Porsche, and it looked like he was going to make room for me after the fast chicane after Corvette Corner," Magnussen
said. "I went in there, he turned in on me, and instead of just hitting him I tried to take some of the curb and straightline the grass. The curb just kicked the rear out and
I went into a huge tank-slapper, hit him, and then hit the wall.

"I'm OK, but the car is not," said the Dane. "It had lots of damage, there was no steering input, and I couldn't drive it back. I'm so sorry for all the
guys."

It was the second consecutive year that misfortune befell the team in the early morning hours at Le Mans. Last year a crash in the Porsche Curves while leading took the
Magnussen/Gavin Corvette out of contention.

"It seems when it gets around 8 o'clock, something happens, whether it's an issue with the car or a crash like today," said Oliver Gavin, Magnussen's teammate.
"It's just devastating when you work all year toward this race. The crew has worked so hard, they've done everything right. We didn't have the easiest car to drive but it was
fast when we got it dialed in. We led from the first safety car period and that's what makes it so hard - we keep leading for so long and then something happens. That's what makes
Le Mans so cruel and so great to win when you overcome all that and succeed. This is the hardest race in the world to win."

While the front-running Corvette was withdrawn, the No. 73 Corvette of Olivier Beretta, Antonio Garcia, and Tommy Milner was second at the 18-hour mark, one lap behind the
class-leading No. 51 Ferrari 458 Italia. Milner and Garcia had triple-stinted through the night, and the crew had replaced the front brake rotors and pads at the halfway point for
the run to the finish.

Olivier Beretta ran the stint at sunrise. "There were just so many incidents and pace cars that there was no way I could settle into a comfortable rhythm, so I
concentrated on bringing the car home."

"The 74 Compuware Corvette was running great, just tires, fuel, and drivers all night long," said team manager Gary Pratt. "We had seven hours to go, a
two-minute lead, but it was still a hard race, and Jan knew that. The crew was doing a good job, the pit stops were clean, we just needed to bring it home. We still have one
bullet left with the 73 Corvette. The car's a lap down, but we can make that up."

With six hours remaining in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, bringing the No. 73 Corvette C6.R home is now the team's focus.